Metadata-Version: 2.0
Name: mkenv
Version: 2.2.1
Summary: A simpler tool for creating venvs in a central location
Home-page: https://github.com/Julian/mkenv
Author: Julian Berman
Author-email: Julian@GrayVines.com
License: MIT
Platform: UNKNOWN
Classifier: Development Status :: 3 - Alpha
Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: MIT License
Classifier: Operating System :: OS Independent
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 2.7
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.4
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 2
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: Implementation :: CPython
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: Implementation :: PyPy
Requires-Dist: appdirs
Requires-Dist: attrs
Requires-Dist: click
Requires-Dist: filesystems
Requires-Dist: packaging
Requires-Dist: toml
Requires-Dist: virtualenv

=====
mkenv
=====

mkenv is a simpler tool for creating and maintaining virtualenvs in a central
location.

It consists of the 5% of `virtualenvwrapper
<https://virtualenvwrapper.readthedocs.org/en/latest/>`_ that I actually use,
and is in some ways meant to more closely complement ``virtualenv`` rather than
completely wrapping or hiding it.


Installation
------------

The usual::

    $ pip install mkenv


Usage
-----

Usage is similar to ``mkvirtualenv``, although ``mkenv`` passes
arguments directly through to ``virtualenv``:

.. code-block:: sh

    $ mkenv nameofvenv -- -p pypy

will create a virtual environment in an appropriate platform-specific
data directory, or in the directory specified by ``WORKON_HOME`` for
compatibility with virtualenvwrapper.


Single-Purpose Virtualenvs
--------------------------

A common use case for virtualenvs is for single-purpose installations, e.g.:

"I want to install fabric and give it its own virtualenv so that its
dependencies can be independently upgraded, all while still being able to use
the ``fab`` binary globally".

``mkenv`` supports a ``--link`` option for this use case:

.. code-block:: sh

    $ mkenv -i fabric --link fab

will create a virtualenv for fabric (in the same normal location), but will
symlink the ``fab`` binary from within the virtualenv into your
``~/.local/bin`` directory.

(You may have heard of `pipsi <https://github.com/mitsuhiko/pipsi>`_ which is a
similar tool for this use case, but with less customization than I would have
liked.)


Temporary Virtualenvs
---------------------

I also find ``mktmpenv`` useful for quick testing. To support its use case,
``mkenv`` currently supports a different but similar style of temporary
virtualenv.

Invoking::

    $ venv=$(mkenv -t)

in your shell will create (or re-create) a global temporary virtualenv,
and print its ``bin/`` subdirectory (which in this case will be then
stored in the ``venv`` variable). It can subsequently be used by, e.g.::

    $ $venv/python

or::

    $ $venv/pip ...

et cetera.

You may prefer using::

    $ cd $(mkenv -t)

as your temporary venv workflow if you're into that sort of thing instead.

The global virtualenv is cleared each time you invoke ``mkenv -t``.
Unless you care, unlike virtualenvwrapper's ``mktmpenv``, there's no
need to care about cleaning it up, whenever it matters for the next
time, it will be cleared and overwritten.

``mkenv`` may support the more similar "traditional" one-use virtualenv in the
future, but given that it does not activate virtualenvs by default (see below),
the current recommendation for this use case would be to simply use the
``virtualenv`` binary directly.


The 5 Minute Tutorial
---------------------

Besides the ``mkenv`` for named-virtualenv creation and ``mkenv -t`` for
temporary-virtualenv creation described above::

    $ findenv name foo

will output (to standard output) the path to a virtualenv with the given name
(see also ``--existing-only``), and::

    $ rmenv foo

will remove it.

There are a number of other slight variants, see the ``--help`` information for
each of the three binaries.

*Real documentation to come (I hope)*


Why don't I use virtualenvwrapper?
----------------------------------

``virtualenvwrapper`` is great! I've used it for a few years. But I've
slowly settled on a much smaller subset of its functionality that I like
to use. Specifically:

    * I don't like activating virtualenvs.

      virtualenvs are magical and hacky enough on their own, and piling
      activation on top just makes things even more messy for me, especially
      when moving around between different projects in a shell.  Some people
      use ``cd`` tricks to solve this, but I just want simplicity.

    * I don't need project support.

      I've never attached a project to a virtualenv. I just use a naming
      convention, naming the virtualenv with the name of the repo (with simple
      coersion), and then using `dynamic directory expansion in my shell
      <https://github.com/Julian/dotfiles/blob/4376b05de0f7af9e7ecb2e3596b8830c806c5d71/.config/zsh/.zshrc#L59-L92>`_
      to handle association.

Basically, I just want a thing that is managing a central repository of
virtualenvs for me. So that's what ``mkenv`` does.


